Tuesday 15 September 2020

Has amateur radio lost the plot?

An interesting article from EI7GL about non-QSO QSL cards recently and, in particular, the following comment to it by another person, stopped to make me think:


The final sentence is the important one.  A contest seems like a decent enough idea.  Yet, precisely because they are competitive, they always lead to cheating, whether that is deliberate by some complex arrangement with other hams, or simply by using, as the comment says, a remote station.

It was exactly the use of remote stations - in this case, multiple remote stations - that led me to drop the idea of taking part in contests after my only attempt to do so in the 2019 RDRC JT9 activity day.  Even though that is not a contest in the very earnest manner of some competitions, it was still important enough to some that they resorted to using expensive access to an enormous array of Yagis across the world, tot up the points and coast to victory.  

Remote stations don't even need to be complex or expensive.  They just need to be within easier reach of that once-in-a-lifetime DX.  Today, there are loads of them around the world, just basic rigs, hooked up to the internet, that anyone can access. 

What point is there in me, or much of anyone else, sitting there for 48 hours, diligently working away with a wire antenna and semi-QRP power from one location?  Answer: none at all.

Being 'on top', 'the biggest', 'the loudest' is all part of the ham radio lexicon.  It's hardly surprising that, when a contest effectively asks: 'who's best?', some will run to use whatever method they can, fair or otherwise, to answer: 'me!'  

Anybody can win, if you pay dearly to access antennas and locations like this.  Image: remotehamradio.com

I suppose the majority of operators take part honestly, in the naive expectation that all is fair, with that fairness ensured by the often rather complex rules that apply.  But we only need one cheat - and there are certainly more of those around than we might expect - to spoil the game for everyone.

I don't follow the contesting world at all, but I do of course notice news about them in the magazines and online.  In this month's Practical Wireless, even avid contesters are now describing the number and timing of radio contests as "completely out of control".  I agree.  

Radio has long ago been hijacked on both sides of the Atlantic by over-competitive men whose entire life is dominated by being 'number 1'. They somehow get themselves elected to positions in national societies, where they set about manipulating how the hobby develops and is portrayed. Sadly, the hobby's whole purpose, if you believe these people and their many followers, becomes one of nothing more than contesting.

So, I'm glad I tried one contest in a serious fashion last year.  It confirmed to me what I already knew: it's a total waste of time, if only because radio is a hobby, not a measure of any worthwhile achievement that the rest of the world values and recognises.



3 comments:

PE4BAS, Bas said...

Hello John, strange that a SWL QSL topic can lead to a whole other interesting discussion. Contesting is "just" part of the hobby, a contest has a gaming element in it and I think this is appealing to youngsters that are already into gaming. However I have to agree that it is totally out of control. Multiple contests every weekend is not really something for "everyone" including many contesters. Personally I like some contests, but only the big ones....the original ones from CQ. And the PACC of course, our own national contest that is held already for 75 years! Yes, it is for personal glory....actually you do your best to win but I don't really care. It's just fun. Our hobby is a experiment hobby (at least I think it is), you can do all kind of experiments including some experiments during a contest. Some people take part just to see how low they can go making contact with QRPp and a antenna made from beer cans. Others just like to see how many DXCC they can work during 48 hours, or how many zones. Others try several different antennas. Or doing propgation research just by listening to contest stations. On the other side there are the "gamers", they want to win. Spending lots of money on their station just to be the loudest. They participate in every contest. They use remote stations allowed or not. We call them cheaters and we don't like them. But hey, it's a hobby....I don't care. If they have fun, let them be. 73, Bas

Photon said...

Hmm. Beer can antennas. Sounds like an experiment, to me!

PE4BAS, Bas said...

If you're interested you certainly have to look at this page: https://a29.veron.nl/hams/pa1b/